False Claims Act 2017 report card: $2.4 billion recovered

Joan W. Feldman (jfeldman@goodwin.com) is a Partner and Health Law Group Practice Chair at Shipman & Goodwin, LLP in Hartford, CT.

On December 21, 2017, the Department of Justice (DOJ) issued its yearly report card describing its most noteworthy settlements in fiscal year 2017 with healthcare providers under the False Claims Act (FCA).[1] In addition to praising the efforts of its dedicated enforcement staff, the DOJ sent a message of both acknowledgment and encouragement to the whistleblowers who bring alleged FCA violations to its attention. It makes good sense for the DOJ to use this annual report card as a form of encouragement for those among us who believe in reporting blatant wrongdoing. Unfortunately, this message is sometimes received by bounty hunters, sometimes entirely motivated by retribution or greed, who are tempted to see wrong when there is no wrong. Nevertheless, there is plenty to learn from these significant settlements, and it never gets old reading about those in positions of power who abuse the public’s trust and do the indefensible out of greed. Indeed, the cases that were featured were stunningly egregious and involved sophisticated healthcare companies.

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